Humboldt Post Office National Historic Site of Canada

Humboldt, Saskatchewan
Corner view of the Humboldt Post Office, showing two prominent facades joined by a large four-storey clock tower. (© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada.)
General view
(© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada.)
Address : 715 - 6th Avenue (corner of Main St.), Humboldt, Saskatchewan

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1977-06-06
Dates:
  • 1911 to 1912 (Construction)
  • 1952 to 1952 (Addition)

Event, Person, Organization:
  • City of Humboldt  (Organization)
  • David Ewart, Dominion Architect  (Architect)
  • Brown Construction Company  (Builder)
Other Name(s):
  • Humboldt Post Office  (Designation Name)

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque:  715 - 6th Avenue (corner of Main St.), Humboldt, Saskatchewan

Constructed in 1911, this building is typical of the post offices that were erected by the Department of Public Works in smaller urban centres throughout Canada at the beginning of the 20th century. The quality of the design, with its Romanesque windows and large clock tower in the same style, made this an important building in a newly-developing small town, and represented the extension of federal services across the West.

Description of Historic Place

At the most prominent intersection in the Saskatchewan city of Humboldt (113 km east of Saskatoon) is located the Humboldt Post Office National Historic Site of Canada. Constructed in 1911-1912, it is a two-and-a-half-storey, red-brown brick building with a high mansard roof sheathed in silver metal. A four-storey bell and clock tower anchors the principal corner. This Romanesque Revival style former post office has buff limestone coping and foundations. A low addition on the north side along Main Street picks up the shape and spacing of the original windows. Official recognition refers to the building on its legal lot.

Heritage Value

The Humboldt Post Office was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1977 because: the quality of its design, with its Romanesque windows and large clock tower in the same style, made this an important building in a newly-developing small town, and represented the extension of federal services across the west.

When the town incorporated in 1907, it was experiencing a lively period of growth fueled by successful agricultural development in the surrounding parkland. The decision by the federal government to install this Government of Canada building, which included a post office, a customs and excise building and its telegraph office, confirmed the rise of Humboldt over neighbouring towns. Like many Saskatchewan towns, its growth plateaued creating a stable and prosperous population. The Humboldt Post Office remains one of the dominant buildings on Main Street and is a landmark in the community.

The Humboldt Post Office was constructed between 1911 and 1912 using a particularly attractive design supplied by the Department of Public Works in Ottawa as part of the Federal Government’s push to provide essential services in developing areas. Its plans were signed by David Ewart of the Office of the Dominion Architect. It is a two-and-a-half-storey building with large dormered gables and stone labels set into the steeply-pitched mansard roof. A four-storey clock and bell tower anchors the corner and also becomes the double entrance to the post office. The customs entrance, less used by the public, is through a third door halfway along the south elevation on 6th Avenue. The windows, doors and dormers on the first floor are round-headed in the Romanesque style, detailed with brick voussoirs and lugsills, while windows on the second floor and tower are flat-headed. A belt course at the roofline and along the base of the tower creates visual interest.

Within its walls were a range of federal government services, including a post office, customs, and weights and measures office located on the first floor, and a customs and inland revenue building and an office for the commanding officer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) located on the second floor. Remains of the caretaker’s quarters are still readily apparent under the angled trusses of the third floor. The RCMP maintained living quarters for its officers here from 1935 to 1964 after the customs office closed. Humboldt’s local police force also kept an office here in the 1940s.

Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Agenda Paper, June 1977.

Character-Defining Elements

Key elements that express the heritage value of the Humboldt Post Office include: its commanding presence on Main Street with two prominent façades joined by a large four-storey clock tower; the lively roofline with gables set in a steeply-pitched mansard slope; its two arched entrances at the base of the tower, each inscribed with “Post Office” in limestone above the doors; its projecting side entrance with a large gable overhead to designate the secondary occupants of the building; the volume defining the former post office lobby with surviving finishes such as the terrazzo floor; the original dark varnished wood staircase by the customs entrance, with a low balustrade; evidence of the original functional design such as the surviving layout on the third floor.